[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 115 (Monday, August 2, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6558-S6559]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE ECONOMY
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I know we are all eager to return to our
States next week to talk to our constituents. We have 1 more week to
go. We hope to complete everything this week. I just outlined to the
Chair and the Members listening about the heavy workload we have that
we need to finish. We should be able to finish this week. That is what
we all want, and we are going to do our utmost to do that. There are
some matters we have to complete this week. We have an extremely
important list of unfinished business.
Democrats have dedicated this work period, as in every work period,
to jobs, putting the unemployed back to work, helping small businesses
grow and saving jobs hanging in the balance. I am disappointed in my
friend, the Republican leader, who has denigrated the work we have done
and tried to do. Remember, because of the policies of the prior
administration, 8 million jobs were lost. There is no dispute about
that. In the last 6 months George Bush was President, we lost 3 million
jobs. The economic recovery package--or the stimulus bill, as it is
known--has created or saved at least 3 million jobs. That doesn't make
up for the 8 million that were lost, but it is a step in the right
direction.
Talk to anyone in the State of Nevada or any other State about the
money in this recovery act that helped teachers. The reason there
weren't huge layoffs last year is because of that bill. FMAP is the
reason why there weren't more layoffs than there were--as a result of
that money that went to States.
We have taken historic steps to clean up Wall Street.
We have made progress on an energy plan that will create hundreds of
thousands of green jobs, lower consumers' utility bills, make sure BP
pays the price for its disaster, and end our dangerous addiction to
oil. It is not everything we wanted to do. It wasn't our first choice,
but it is our first step, because we could not get any Republican
support for an energy bill.
After a shamefully long fight, we finally extended unemployment
insurance to the hardest hit victims of the
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recession. I have said it before, and I will say it again. Mark Zandi,
John McCain's chief economic adviser, has said that for every $1 of
unemployment money we send to the States, it creates $1.61.
We passed other good bills too--for example, the HIRE Act. That was
very good for business. I saw the fruits of that legislation in Nevada
a week ago last Saturday. I went to a restaurant. All 24 people working
there took advantage of the HIRE Act. What part of that bill did they
take advantage of? They hired everyone who had been out of work for at
least 60 days. They hired them for at least 30 hours a week, and they
didn't have to pay the money for withholding. At the end of the year,
they will get a $1,000 tax credit for every one of those employees.
They will get $24,000 in tax credits for that small business.
The HIRE Act did other things. It extended the highway bill for a
year, saving 1 million jobs. It also allowed those small businesses to
write off purchases up to $250,000 that they previously had to
depreciate. It added money to the Build America Bonds, which has worked
so well across the country.
I wish we could have done more. I wish our small business jobs bill,
which we are working on now, could have passed when we brought it up
the first time. It would create a lot of jobs. The Presiding Officer is
one of those who have worked hard on that legislation. I think we see
the light at the end of the tunnel. We should be able to get that done
this year.
Having said all that, we have a lot more to do, and we acknowledge
that. Unfortunately, most of what we have accomplished has taken longer
than it should have. The minority has made it clear it will say no, no
matter the question, no matter who suffers, and no matter how much of
the American people's time they waste. These procedural votes we have
gone through have been unnecessary. They have been only to kill time.
At every turn, we have met more unprecedented and unnecessary delays
from our friends on the other side.
Nowhere was that more painfully plain than the refusal to work with
us last month on a bill that would have put half a million more hard-
working Americans to work in small businesses. It would have helped
those businesses get capital and get tax cuts and would have allowed
them to hire and to grow. Karen Mills, the head of the Small Business
Administration, has been traveling the country the last 2 weeks,
alerting small businesses that we need to pass this bill so she can do
some things to help small businesses. Right now, there is no money to
do that.
I am very sad to report that this has not been the most bipartisan
work period in Senate history. Quite the contrary. But it is still our
responsibility to do right by our constituents. We still need to do
that, and we still have time to do that, and I hope we can start today.
I hope we can come together and show the country that all Senators
have at least one basic belief: we have to do all we can to make sure
our children have teachers in the classrooms and police officers and
firefighters on the streets. That is what the vote tonight at quarter
to 6 is all about. We will vote in a few hours on that amendment that
will keep teachers, firefighters, and policemen from being laid off,
and it does that in a fiscally responsible way. It protects jobs while
cutting spending elsewhere. Every penny spent with the vote at 5:45
will be paid for.
First, let's talk about teachers. The stimulus we passed last year
kept hundreds of thousands of educators from losing their jobs. But as
States continue to sacrifice education funding, school districts in
Nevada and all across the country face the very real prospect of having
to lay off thousands of teachers just weeks before the school year
begins. Twelve hundred jobs are at risk in Nevada. Nearly twice as many
teachers are at risk in Kentucky. In Kentucky, as many as 3,000 could
lose their jobs as teachers. In California and Texas, those highly
populated States, the number of jobs reaches over 10,000 for sure. All
told, as many as 140,000 teachers could lose their jobs across our
country. That would be tragic, especially considering we have the
ability to prevent it.
Today's amendment would essentially extend the Recovery Act support
that has worked so well--for teachers and for FMAP. States such as
Nevada would get more than $80 million to help keep teachers in the
classroom, and every penny would be offset by cutting spending
elsewhere. It is fully paid for and doesn't interfere at all with the
Department of Education programs--for example, Race to the Top--or
funding for charter schools or ongoing education reform.
But what is at stake today is not just teachers. They are not the
only ones who lose out when they lose their jobs. We also need to think
about the scores of students they teach, mentor, help, and inspire.
When we vote to save teachers' jobs, we are also voting to save our
students' future.
Second, let's talk about public safety. The Medicaid Program ensures
that the poorest of the poor in our communities can afford to see a
doctor when they are sick. We know how States have been hammered with
people moving into the need for Medicaid--people losing their jobs. It
has been so necessary that these Medicaid Programs include more people.
But the program does a lot more than just that. It benefits everyone by
stimulating the economy. It is a source of money that is spent all over
a community--in doctors' offices, hospitals, and other places. When the
States get this money, it is fungible and they can use it for other
things.
But just as we see in education, cash-strapped States are looking for
places to save money. If they don't get the help they are counting on,
if States don't get the money for which they budgeted, they are going
to cut critical services such as police officers and teachers and
firefighters. Nevada stands to lose as much as $80 million. Again,
Kentucky stands to lose twice as much, and California and New York
stand to lose $2 billion each. Across the country, $16 billion is at
stake.
That is what is in this simple legislation before us--simple but
extremely important. But let's be clear. This vote, like the principle
behind it, is simple. It is about saving jobs--not just to keep
unemployment from growing but because of how important those jobs are
in our society. When our children go back to school at the end of this
summer, there should be a teacher standing in front of the classroom.
Without this bill, there might not be. Our teachers strengthen our
future, and the least we can do is secure theirs.
Another thing: This money is not going to go to a State unless the
Governor asks for the money. That is what the legislation says.
When a crime is committed in our communities or a fire breaks out in
a family's home, we all expect enough police officers and firefighters
to be on call. Without this bill, they might not even be on the job.
They always look out for us. The least we can do is look out for them.
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